THE CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST 297 



yellowish white ; the head deeply, sparsely punctured ; the pleurae and 

 notum deeply, closely punctured ; the median fovea indistinct, not con- 

 nected with the median ocellus; the wings with a dusky band in the region 

 of the stigma. Length 14 mm. 



Habitat. — Aweme, Manitoba ; Norman Criddle, collector. 



This species is similir \.q fascipennis Cresson. The densely banded 

 wings will differentiate it. 



Cephaleia jenseni, n. sp. — Female : body rufous with dusky spots on 

 the antennal sockets ; median fovea, posterior orbits, postocellar area, 

 the meson of the prothorax and line at sides of the prothorax, a line on 

 the median lobe of the mesonotum, the coxae and the cephalic and caudal 

 margins of the femora, black; the posterior orbits and the antennœ, white, 

 somewhat rufous at base ; median fovea a rounded pit ; median ocellus in 

 a rounded depression ; the head sparsely punctured ; the median lobe of 

 the mesonotum, the shoulders of the lateral lobes and the scutellum, pol- 

 ished ; the remainder of the notum sparsely punctured ; the third segment 

 of the antennse longer than the fourth and fifth together ; the wing-veins 

 brownish, slightly infuscated along the veins. Length 11 mm. 



Habitat. — Eagle Bend, Minnesota. J. P. Jensen, collector. 



This species is similar to criddlei Mack. It lacks the fuscous banded 

 wings and the form of the median fovea is different. 



Famphilius transversa, n. sp. — Female: body black, with the clypeus, 

 the face, the first segment of the antennae beneath, the antennae on its 

 apical third, the cheeks, the posterior orbits, the tegulee, the scutellum, the 

 legs except the posterior tibise, and the abdominal segments three and four 

 and part of five, varying from whitish to yellowish and rufous ; the wings 

 hyaline ; the veins brownish ; the stigma dark ; the head finely sparsely 

 punctured ; the notum almost smooth, sparsely punctured on the posterior 

 angles ; the scutellum roughened ; the antennae with the third segment 

 wider and slightly longer than the fourth ; antennae with about twenty- 

 eight segments ; the mesopleurae fin^ely roughend and setaceous. Length 

 12 mm. 



Habitat. — Franconia, New Hampshire. Mrs. Annie Trumbull Slos- 

 son, collector. 



This species is similar to perplex a Cresson. 



Pamphilius deiitatus, n. sp.— Body black with the terminal half of the 

 antennae, the clypeus, a dentate spot on the inner orbits extended as a 

 parenthesis-shaped mark to the caudal aspect of the head ; an emarginate 



